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==History== | ==History== | ||
===Beginnings=== | ===Beginnings=== | ||
− | Seville Quarter started as "Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse," a beer-and-peanuts | + | Seville Quarter started as "Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse," a beer-and-peanuts nightclub specializing in Dixieland jazz. It was founded by [[Bob Snow]], an ex-Navy pilot and former trumpet player for the Minneapolis symphony whose band played jazz at private parties and nightclubs around Pensacola. |
Snow rented a dilapidated [[Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse|brick warehouse]] on East [[Government Street]] (formerly home of the [[Pensacola Cigar and Tobacco Company]]) for $140 per month, and he and his bandmates made repairs and built a small bandstand. His total startup budget was limited to a last military paycheck of $400, $1,500 for the sale of his sports car, $1,700 from pawning an antique shotgun collection, and $50 from some old bottles he found behind the warehouse.<ref>J. Earle Bowden. "Seville Quarter entertainment complex needs new touch of genius." ''Pensacola News Journal'', September 14, 1986.</ref> When an air conditioning contractor demanded up-front payment for the $3,500 cooling system, Snow couldn't afford to pay. Luckily, attorney [[Wilmer Mitchell]] was able to convince the [[Citizens and People's National Bank]] to issue a $5,000 loan.<ref name="newbeat">"Rosie O'Grady's good times return with a new beat and look." ''Pensacola Journal'', May 13, 1983.</ref> | Snow rented a dilapidated [[Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse|brick warehouse]] on East [[Government Street]] (formerly home of the [[Pensacola Cigar and Tobacco Company]]) for $140 per month, and he and his bandmates made repairs and built a small bandstand. His total startup budget was limited to a last military paycheck of $400, $1,500 for the sale of his sports car, $1,700 from pawning an antique shotgun collection, and $50 from some old bottles he found behind the warehouse.<ref>J. Earle Bowden. "Seville Quarter entertainment complex needs new touch of genius." ''Pensacola News Journal'', September 14, 1986.</ref> When an air conditioning contractor demanded up-front payment for the $3,500 cooling system, Snow couldn't afford to pay. Luckily, attorney [[Wilmer Mitchell]] was able to convince the [[Citizens and People's National Bank]] to issue a $5,000 loan.<ref name="newbeat">"Rosie O'Grady's good times return with a new beat and look." ''Pensacola Journal'', May 13, 1983.</ref> | ||
[[Image:RosieOGradysWarehouse.jpg|thumb|right|The original "Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse," photo © Nelson K. Hamilton]] | [[Image:RosieOGradysWarehouse.jpg|thumb|right|The original "Rosie O'Grady's Warehouse," photo © Nelson K. Hamilton]] | ||
− | Opening night was [[August | + | Opening night was [[August 11]], [[1967]]. An early writeup of the club described the scene: |
<blockquote><p>In Rosie's, you find old timey silent films with such stars as Charlie Chaplin and W. C. Fields. You'll find the twangy, happy sound of banjos.</p><p>And sing-alongs. The words are flashed on a screen and when the banjos begin plucking away, it'll take a real music hater to keep from singing along with those nostalgic melodies!</p><p>But most of all there's the great sound of Dixieland music. And what music!</p><p>"This music makes me go," says a college gal when the Dixie Racing & Marching Society Band opens up. "Something happens inside — and whammo!"<ref>"Rosie O'Grady's: Step Back Down Memory Lane." ''Pensacola News-Journal'', October 1, 1967.</ref></p></blockquote> | <blockquote><p>In Rosie's, you find old timey silent films with such stars as Charlie Chaplin and W. C. Fields. You'll find the twangy, happy sound of banjos.</p><p>And sing-alongs. The words are flashed on a screen and when the banjos begin plucking away, it'll take a real music hater to keep from singing along with those nostalgic melodies!</p><p>But most of all there's the great sound of Dixieland music. And what music!</p><p>"This music makes me go," says a college gal when the Dixie Racing & Marching Society Band opens up. "Something happens inside — and whammo!"<ref>"Rosie O'Grady's: Step Back Down Memory Lane." ''Pensacola News-Journal'', October 1, 1967.</ref></p></blockquote> | ||
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===Fast Eddie's=== | ===Fast Eddie's=== | ||
− | Fast Eddie's Billiard Parlor (former Coppersmith's | + | Fast Eddie's Billiard Parlor (former Coppersmith's Gallery) is Seville Quarter's pool hall. |
Among the salvaged furniture are doors and wheels from old ships, English chandeliers, New Orleans cypress doors, benches from the old [[L&N Passenger Depot and Express Office|L&N Passenger Depot]]. The wainscot and wall paneling were fashioned out of solid wood doors from the [[American National Bank Building]]. | Among the salvaged furniture are doors and wheels from old ships, English chandeliers, New Orleans cypress doors, benches from the old [[L&N Passenger Depot and Express Office|L&N Passenger Depot]]. The wainscot and wall paneling were fashioned out of solid wood doors from the [[American National Bank Building]]. | ||
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==External links== | ==External links== | ||
− | *[http://www. | + | *[http://www.rosies.com/ www.rosies.com] - Official site |
− | [[Category:Bars & nightclubs | + | [[Category:Bars & nightclubs]] |